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<div class="moz-cite-prefix">On 07/11/13 17:02, legacy daily wrote:<br>
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<div>Geany seems to fulfill multiple editing needs for me.
However, it's an easy install - in terms of default mousepad
or leafpad do the job just fine. Just my 2 cents...<br>
<br>
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Regarding the Xubuntu strategy, please allow me to add a voice
and a few thoughts but first let me thank you for all your
hard work related to this project. It's an outstanding
solution that is rock solid and of high QUALITY (the larger
meaning of the word quality). Since I respect the work you
have done very much, please accept these as my humble
suggestions.<br>
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Thanks for the praise!<br>
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<div>1. Would you find it appropriate to include a stronger
mention of privacy and user's rights - diverging from where I
see Ubuntu going? I mean protecting users from unwanted
searches and unrequested Amazon suggestions or other similar
steps. If users specifically want such capabilities, let them
choose to install something. Let the OS do nothing to promote
and instead do the opposite (discourage upsteam from building
such features into DEs, exclude packages from default install
that do such things, etc.). I understand the distro makes many
choices but let those choices be guided by principles of
freedom and privacy as much as possible.<br>
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While this is not specifically mentioned in the Strategy Document,
the components in Xubuntu do not do this, and if anything that does
would be proposed for inclusion, it would need a thorough
discussion. I think I can speak for the whole team that nobody wants
such things in. However, it would be quite some work to get a well
thought out strategy written, so I'm uncertain if we want to take
the extra step unless we need to make a clear decision for or
agaisnt such things.<br>
<br>
Ultimately, while security and privacy is important for us, we
aren't exactly a security-focused OS, nor is it our goal to become
one. There are other OS'es that do it better than us. (Again, this
is not to say I think we shouldn't care about the privacy of our
users.)<br>
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<div>2. Would you consider expanding the reach of Xubuntu by
adding its deltas to Debian? The polish and style of Xubuntu
are superb but the release cycle and decisions of Ubuntu are
not always ideal. How amazing it would be to have Xubuntu on
Debian? I see Xubuntu as not just another Ubuntu but of far
greater potential (because of many factors as an example the
choices made by Unity and Gnome3).<br>
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I'm not sure what you are after. The Strategy Document already
states that we should "Attempt to reduce our delta by pushing
appropriate patches upstream" (though this part is soon to be moved
out of the SD to the process descriptions).<br>
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<div>3. Would you consider mention of support for smaller
devices (such as Raspberry PI, etc.) or is this something that
you relegate to Ubuntu and Debian or other distros and outside
the scope of Xubuntu? In other words, in terms of target
audience I would hope Xubuntu would be run on huge servers,
small desktops and laptops but also on tiny devices that
require some UI.<br>
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Unless we suddenly gain more contributors to these areas, we simply
do not have the heavy lifting power to do such things.<br>
<br>
My personal opinion is that there are probably better UI's for small
devices than Xfce and better solutions for servers than Xubuntu.
That doesn't stop anybody using Xubuntu on such setups though; it's
always nice to hear Xubuntu works with this or that, and in this or
that setup. Ultimately, I value stability more than being able to
run an OS with as many devices as possible.<br>
<br>
Cheers,<br>
Pasi Lallinaho<br>
Xubuntu Project Lead<br>
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<div>Thanks again for your hard work and for making Xubuntu the
outstanding distro that it is today.<br>
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<div><br>
<div class="gmail_extra">
<div>- Gevorg<br>
<br>
<a moz-do-not-send="true" href="http://legacydaily.com">http://legacydaily.com</a></div>
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<div class="gmail_quote">On Thu, Nov 7, 2013 at 7:58 AM,
Richard Elkins <span dir="ltr"><<a
moz-do-not-send="true"
href="mailto:richard.elkins@gmail.com"
target="_blank">richard.elkins@gmail.com</a>></span>
wrote:<br>
<blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin:0 0 0
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<div text="#000000" bgcolor="#FFFFFF">
<pre style="line-height:normal;text-indent:0px;letter-spacing:normal;text-align:start;font-variant:normal;text-transform:none;font-style:normal;white-space:pre-wrap;font-weight:normal;word-spacing:0px">I think that the discussion got off track. A good engineer's editor probably supports any language - it does for me.
The choice of default text editor should be based on the target audience for the release which has evolved since the first 'buntu, quite
a bit. Who is the target audience nowadays? Or, should we default in one for simple note-padding and one with a lot of engineering capabilities?
Keep in mind that they are both low on dependencies, relative to other packages.
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<div>On 11/07/2013 05:55 AM, Eero Tamminen wrote:<br>
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<pre>Hi,
On keskiviikko 06 marraskuu 2013, Joshua O'Leary wrote:
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<pre>It mentions C++ programs as being unsuitable, but this is clearly not the
case as core components (such as apt and software-centre, and now even
gcc) are coded in C++
</pre>
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<pre>Also all browsers use C++, from Dillo to Firefox
(Gecko and Webkit HTML engines are coded in C++,
even if the GUI toolkit wouldn't use C++).
- Eero
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<pre class="moz-signature" cols="72">--
Pasi Lallinaho (knome) » <a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="http://open.knome.fi/">http://open.knome.fi/</a>
Leader of Shimmer Project and Xubuntu » <a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="http://shimmerproject.org/">http://shimmerproject.org/</a>
Graphic artist, webdesigner, Ubuntu member » <a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="http://xubuntu.org/">http://xubuntu.org/</a></pre>
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